LAETARE – 4th
Sunday of Lent
31 March 2019 at Bruder Klaus
Jos. 5:9a, 10-12
2 Cor. 5:17-21
Lk 15:1-3, 11-32
Praised be
Jesus Christ!
It is Laetare Sunday today! Laetare
is a Latin word which means to rejoice, to be happy. In the midst of our Lenten
penance, the Church today on the Fourth Sunday of Lent celebrates what should
be the ultimate reason for our happiness already in this life. Today we
celebrate the joy of reconciliation with God in Christ, reconciliation won
through His saving death upon the Cross and His glorious Resurrection. It is
not so much that we take a break from doing penance, but that we acknowledge Lenten
penance for what it is, namely a privileged way to express our sorrow for evil
thoughts, words, acts or omissions, which have kept us from the loving embrace
of our heavenly Father. Doing penance, as we Catholics do or should do in Lent
especially, is a tradition-bound means for communicating to ourselves and to
others our firm intention to turn away from sin and go to God, to head for real
joy.
“Today I have removed the reproach of
Egypt from you.”
Today is about the real joy that is ours on being forgiven by
God through the minister of His Church and coming to live in God’s good graces.
Through works of penance and sacramental reconciliation, we come to take our
rightful place as baptized children of God in the house of our heavenly Father
or as the Book of Joshua puts it, by our entrance into the Promised Land. “Today I have removed the reproach of Egypt
from you.” Egypt symbolizes that idolatry which places creature comforts
above our eternal destiny. Catholic Lenten penance marks our sojourn in the
desert, having come out of Egypt. It is our effort toward stripping away all
but that one thing which is necessary, namely life with God in Christ.
Our Lenten penance or penance at any other time of the year
is any sacrifice that we take on at the Church’s direction in reparation for
sins, faults and failings. It finds its crowning or perfection in the
celebration of the Sacrament of Penance. In Confession, as we confess our own sins
to the priest, as we hear his counsel and receive absolution, we leave the
fleshpots of Egypt behind and begin to live for the Lord alone in the land that
He has promised us. From today’s Gospel of the parable of the Prodigal Son:
“Coming to his senses he thought,
‘How many of my father's hired workers have more than enough food to eat, but
here am I, dying from hunger. I shall get up and go to my father and I shall
say to him’, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you. I no longer
deserve to be called your son; treat me as you would treat one of your hired
workers.’”
As children, I can remember how we understood
Laetare
Sunday. Its lighter colored (rose) vestments symbolized for us something like
coming up for air in the midst of our hard Lenten penance (you know: extra
prayers and special efforts to be good, and of course, giving up candy and
desserts except on Sundays). This type of popular piety helps us to understand
what we mean by Laetare. As such, it can help us to understand the real genius
of Catholic Lenten penance. Lent should lift us out of low living in order to keep
constant company with the angels and saints before God.
St. Paul exhorts the Corinthians and us today:
“We implore you on behalf of Christ,
be reconciled to God. For our sake he made him to be sin who did not know sin,
so that we might become the righteousness of God in him.”
Joy comes to us by our choice to embrace
Jesus Who suffered and died for us, to embrace the scandal of His Cross, its
ignominy, and thus to be united with Christ’s perfect sacrifice for our
salvation. It is a stance very much at odds with what greets us as we walk down
any airport concourse or through a shopping mall. True life and happiness is
something quite different from all the people we see in those places with drink
and snack in hand. Penance is a very other way and we need to seek it out. We really
think too little of the brilliance of fasting and abstinence! Christian joy is simply
at odds with the continual search to satisfy creature comforts. St. Paul’s
admonition is to live otherwise; be
reconciled to God!
Catholic penance during Lent is supposed to bring home to us
a very important truth. The notion is that penance can win us over to a
greater, yes, a boundless joy beyond that which this world can offer. Such
lessons do not come easy for any of us, I suspect. Apart maybe from athletes,
like bodybuilders, who ascribe to the motto “No Gain without Pain”, personal
sacrifice and anything beyond immediate gratification seems hard for some people
to grasp. Most of us have a hard time with child martyrs, like St. Maria
Goretti, or with wholesome young people, who died, most would say, too young,
like Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati. Apart from the desire for a long,
trouble-free life, more tragically, many people even want space in life for
their vices and for that one temptation or the other.
Finding joy in repentance and
reconciliation should be what distinguishes us as Catholics. We all must
recognize ourselves as sinners in need of forgiveness. In humbling ourselves to
recognize our personal indebtedness, we can move to rejoice and celebrate the
conversion of the prodigal son. We can avoid the narrow-mindedness of the older
brother, who failed to understand the Father’s longing for his younger son to
come home.
“My son, you are here with me always;
everything I have is yours. But now we must celebrate and rejoice, because your
brother was dead and has come to life again; he was lost and has been found.”
The Church as a loving mother or a
forgiving father like in Luke’s Gospel has to stand there before us as the
image of that love which sets free from death and brings life and joy. How that
is supposed to work is not easy to say in every case; it is often something
very different from mommy kissing a scraped knee and making it all better
again. It logically can cost us and hence the reasonableness of our voluntarily
choosing to do penance. That is the genius of Catholic doctrine about
indulgences and making reparation through acts of penance. No doubt, the
prodigal son had to make good on his resolve, after the music and dancing, and
behave himself as a hired hand in his father’s house. He could not presume his
previous station before running off and squandering his part of the
inheritance. The hard work of penance would signal to his father and to the whole
household his contrite and humbled heart. We must do the same after we have
been forgiven in confession. That is the Catholic sense of our penance in
response to the temporal punishment due for our sins. Laetare! Rejoice!
Praised be
Jesus Christ!
PROPERANTES ADVENTUM DIEI DEI
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